Introduction

What you can do with serial access on a LS Pro

At first: check serial access
In fact you can control the UBoot Bootloader.

You can change to EM Mode at will without any dirty tricks.

You can look at the linux system of your LS pro without having to flash any custom firmware

You can load a kernel + ramdisk via tftp

Hey! We connect it because we can!

Serial access isn`t that important for users, but it is very important for developers because they
exactly see what is happening while the LS Pro boots.
The kernel log tells us a little more about the hardware and it allows us to debug a newer kernel.
Without serial that is not possible.

Why it is easy to gain serial access on the LS Pro

Pinout - Ground is on the Right side

Pin

Signal

1

Transmit (TX)

2

Receive (RX)

3

Power (3.3V)*

4

Ground (GND)

The Serial Converter

The serial port signals from the processor are only 3.3V. For proper RS-232 12V signaling, an RS-232 level shifter needs to be added. These are very common in PDA serial cables also, but can be purchased

Models other than KuroPro

If you are attaching a serial header pin onto the main board, you may want to consider:

Using the header pin unit with a 90 degree bend, or you might not be able to close the case

Soldering it with the pins toward the interior, rather than toward the case. This allows easier access, since if the pins face the case side they would be very close to the metal side. This would make access is so tight that one might end up taking the board out to get plug fitted on the pins.

Solder the 4-pin header to the board. Make sure you don't have shorts.

You will need to switch wires on the TTL-232R-3V3 cable. Use a sharp object to lift the plastic tabs and carefully pull the wires out. Rearrange them according to the table above (black, empty, orange, yellow, empty, empty) and slide those wires back in. Tape the other wires to make sure they don't short anything.

When plugging in the cable, make sure black aligns with GND, yellow with TXD, and orange with RXD.

Connect the USB cable to your computer, start a terminal program with the right settings.

Turn on the device, you should see output from the bootloader in couple seconds.

Using a USB Plug to form a friction-fit connector

WARNING!

I blew out a fuse on my KuroBoxPro by using this method, consider soldering in a serial port header instead Ramuk 18:13, 18 August 2007 (CEST)

1) You will also need an old USB-plug (Female, Type A). I used two from USB-extender-cables and the rest from female-USB-connectors that i directly ordered in a shop.
2) you will also need something as thick as 1 mm. This can be wood, plastic or the latest flyers you collected by going out at the weekend. We used a Eurocard which we broke in Pieces (4 rows * 9 holes)

Prepare the USB-Plug

Indifferent which way you use, you will have to make the usb-plastik part a little smaller....you also will have to get rid of all parts so that it looks like the next picture.

If you are using one from an extender cable

Best would be to use a grinder. Do not hesitate to destroy the cables. It is recommended to remove everything so that you can solder the cables from the phonesync-cable directly to the pins.

If you have bought the part directly

Just open the metal-case and use a grinder to make it look like the picture above. You won`t have to remove any glue or cables.

Checking the cable/plug

Best with a Voltmeter. To go completely safe test from the pins for the yellow + orange wires. The green one + shield can be tested from the pin on the other side.

Solder the phone sync cable to the USB-plug

You will have both read and write access if you solder it that way.

In this picture: Green is GND, Yellow is RX (as in "data entering the LSPro") and Orange is TX (as in "data coming from the LSPro"). The not connected terminal is VCC.